Streeting's war on trans youth, Starmer's cruelty to trans adults, and your u-turning on your manifesto promise to "remove indignities for trans people who deserve recognition and acceptance" is shameful.
Streeting's war on trans youth, Starmer's cruelty to trans adults, and your u-turning on your manifesto promise to "remove indignities for trans people who deserve recognition and acceptance" is shameful.
And I have to be honest, watching the Discourse yesterday, I could absolutely see a lot of the people categorically saying any participation in facilitating fundraisers is a per se crime saying the same things about abortion or gender affirming care, with the same attitude.
And I have to be honest, watching the Discourse yesterday, I could absolutely see a lot of the people categorically saying any participation in facilitating fundraisers is a per se crime saying the same things about abortion or gender affirming care, with the same attitude.
That's not how this works. There's no demand.
You want viewers? Take CEO's and drop them in the tundra and film them being chased by wolves.
That's not how this works. There's no demand.
You want viewers? Take CEO's and drop them in the tundra and film them being chased by wolves.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=oE6w...
www.youtube.com/watch?v=oE6w...
Because he’s a Betar member Betar amplified it and from there it picked up the traction everyone saw.
Good news in the sense that it likely led to far less violence than would have occurred if they did make it there.
Because he’s a Betar member Betar amplified it and from there it picked up the traction everyone saw.
If they won't admit they broke rules that they clearly broke, what reason is there to believe a higher standard will be applied to a published paper?
If they won't admit they broke rules that they clearly broke, what reason is there to believe a higher standard will be applied to a published paper?
It's about how Tren de Aragua—an arcane obsession of organized crime buffs—became the latest villain that threatens our way of life.
It started as an alibi for a Denver-area apartment developer with code violations.
It's about how Tren de Aragua—an arcane obsession of organized crime buffs—became the latest villain that threatens our way of life.
It started as an alibi for a Denver-area apartment developer with code violations.
www.cbsnews.com/detroit/news...
www.cbsnews.com/detroit/news...
This was their response:
This was their response: